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Doordarshan, India’s public service broadcaster was launched in New Delhi on September 15, 1959, as part of Prasar Bharti (the public service broadcaster of the country). What started as an experimental telecast with the help of a small transmitter and a makeshift studio grew to become one of India’s largest broadcasting organizations.

It was only in 1965 that Doordarshan began regular daily transmissions as a part of All India Radio. The television service extended to Mumbai and Amritsar in 1972, and to seven other states only in 1975. The tune and the logo of the channel have had a connection with the audience ever since its inception, asserts a Live mint report.

The iconic symbol will soon be retired to be replaced by one that connects to a new, younger audience. It is a time to walk down the memory lane and understand where it all began.

Devashis Bhattacharyya, an alumnus of the National Institute of Design, is the man behind much-loved DD eye. He along with eight of his friends at NID were working on a government project in Ahmedabad, when Doordarshan moved out of being a subset of All India Radio (AIR).

He designed the two curves, depicting the yin and yang and it ended up being one of the 14 stories that were submitted to his teacher, Vikas Satwalekar. The then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi chose this over other designs, according to a Hindustan Times report.

Though the design was upgraded throughout the 80s and 90s, students from NID were again asked to spearhead the same. Another NID alumnus, RL Mistry worked on the animation for the original symbol. He made copies and then shot them under a camera, rotating them till they reached a final form which was eventually called the DD eye.

The trademark Doordarshan tune was composed by Pandit Ravi Shankar with Ustad Ali Ahmed Hussain Khan and telecast on April 1, 1976, for the first time. - Your Story